Current:Home > NewsAt Stake in Arctic Refuge Drilling Vote: Money, Wilderness and a Way of Life -DollarDynamic
At Stake in Arctic Refuge Drilling Vote: Money, Wilderness and a Way of Life
View
Date:2025-04-16 21:40:55
A Senate committee voted Wednesday to advance a plan that would allow oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, one of the country’s last untouched wilderness areas. While the drive to open the refuge is being spearheaded by Alaska’s senior senator, it’s getting a mixed reaction from Alaskans who live there and rely on the land.
Only one community falls within the borders of the refuge: Kaktovik, a city of about 240 people where subsistence hunting is not just a way of life, it’s survival.
“We get most of our food from the land,” said Robert Thompson, a Kaktovik resident who leads trips into the refuge. “If you visit our grocery story and see $23 steaks, you’ll understand why. And it’s our culture.”
Thompson has watched for decades as Congress has debated the future of a 1.5-million-acre sliver of the refuge known as the coastal plain. That area lacks a federal distinction to permanently protect it, and oil companies and Alaska officials have long hoped it might be home to billions of dollars worth of oil.
It also happens to be home to polar bears, the calving grounds of the Porcupine Caribou herd, and thousands of migratory birds.
In the past, conservationists have fought off Republican efforts to allow drilling there. This time, as the drilling plan comes one step closer to final approval, that’s seeming less likely.
Thompson worries that any development—he uses the word “exploitation”—could directly impact his ability to hunt. But his concerns go beyond that: “I don’t want to live in an oil field,” he said.
A Cautionary Tale from Nuiqsut
The community of Nuiqsut, which is close to Prudhoe Bay and is in the heart of the Alpine oil field, could offer a cautionary tale.
“I’ve attended a number of meetings there, and hunters complain about being pushed out by oil development from their traditional hunting areas,” said Pat Pourchot, a former Interior Department special assistant for Alaska affairs and former commissioner of Alaska’s Department of Natural Resources.
The sprawling infrastructure associated with the wells has changed the landscape around it, Pourchot said.
“Nobody wants to shoot toward a pipeline or a road with trucks on it. Their hunting areas have changed, and they have to go further afield,” he said.
The Promise of Oil Money
On the other side is the argument that the revenue oil can help local communities. In testimony before Congress earlier this month, Matthew Rexford, the tribal administrator for the Native Village of Kaktovik and the president of the Kaktovik Inupiat Corporation, offered a fiery argument for allowing drilling.
“The oil and gas industry supports our communities by providing jobs, business opportunities and infrastructure investments, has built our schools, hospitals, and has moved our people away from third-world living conditions—we refuse to go backward in time,” he said.
Senate Republicans have pointed to that testimony to argue that Native Alaskans want the wildlife refuge opened.
The reality, of course, is complicated, and a lot of money is at stake.
If drilling goes ahead in the coastal plain, it will also be able to go forward on nearby land owned by the Kaktovik Inupiat Corporation, which Rexford represents, and the Arctic Slope Regional Corporation (ASRC). ASRC signed a lease agreement with Chevron and BP in 1984 stipulating that if the federal government allowed drilling in the region, they could develop a 92,000-acre portion owned by the native groups.
That land is home to the only well that is known to have been drilled in the coastal plain—a test well called KIC#1 that was drilled in 1984. The results of that well remain one of Alaska’s most closely guarded secrets.
Thompson said he worries that that lease agreement could influence what Rexford and others say about the development.
“They go to D.C. as if they’re representing the native people of the North Slope, and the people who interview them bill them as that,” Thompson said. “But they’re representing the interests of a for-profit corporation that’s in joint venture with Chevron and BP.”
Drilling Bill Could Have Wider Repercussions
The vote Wednesday by the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources unleashed a torrent of opposition from conservationists and scientists.
It was the latest step in a battle that began this summer when drilling in the refuge was proposed to fill a hole in the federal budget. But the war over drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge has been going on for decades.
“That we must still fight to save the Arctic refuge is just shameful,” said Jamie Rappaport Clark, president and CEO of Defenders of Wildlife.
Former Sen. Frank Murkowski spent years trying to bring drilling to the refuge, and when his daughter, Lisa Murkowski, took over his seat in 2002, she inherited that fight. She is now chairman of the committee that voted to open the coastal plain to drilling. The effort is linked to the Republicans’ tax overhaul plan and will require just a simple majority to pass.
Murkowski’s bill requires that the footprint for any wells and related activity be limited to just 2,000 acres of the coastal plain, and it promises two rounds of competitive bidding and strict adherence to environmental standards. But opponents say the language is misleading. The 2,000 acres need not be contiguous, according to the bill, and would be linked by a series of roads, pipelines and other structures.
Kristen Miller, the conservation director for the Alaska Wilderness League, said that means the entire 1.5 million acres of the coastal plain could be developed.
Alex Taurel, deputy legislative director for the League of Conservation Voters, said the group is starting to pressure Republicans over the wildlife refuge. They hope to replicate their success from 12 years ago, when enough House Republicans opposed a similar effort that it failed.
Earlier this week, in anticipation of the vote, 37 leading Arctic wildlife scientists sent a letter to key senators opposing drilling on the coastal plain. They noted that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had described the coastal plain as containing the greatest wildlife diversity of any protected area above the Arctic Circle.
A bipartisan group of former Interior Department officials echoed that in a letter sent Tuesday. “In our view, there is no place like the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and no place more deserving of protection for future generations of Americans,” wrote the group, which included officials from the Nixon, George W. Bush, Clinton and Obama administrations. “Some places are just too special to drill.”
veryGood! (625)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Team USA Olympic athletes are able to mimic home at their own training facility in France
- Team USA Olympic athletes are able to mimic home at their own training facility in France
- Former ballerina in Florida is convicted of manslaughter in her estranged husband’s 2020 shooting
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Boar’s Head expands recall to include 7 million more pounds of deli meats tied to listeria outbreak
- Jason Kelce’s appearance ‘super cool’ for Olympic underdog USA field hockey team
- Interest rate cut coming soon, but Fed likely won't tell you exactly when this week
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Baseball's best bullpen? Tanner Scott trade huge for Padres at MLB deadline
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- 2024 Olympics: Judo Star Dislocates Shoulder While Celebrating Bronze Medal
- Navajo Nation plans to test limit of tribal law preventing transportation of uranium on its land
- Jack Flaherty trade gives Dodgers another starter amid rotation turmoil
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Pennsylvania casinos ask court to force state to tax skill games found in stores equally to slots
- Quick! Banana Republic Factory’s Extra 40% Sale Won’t Last Long, Score Chic Classics Starting at $11
- Phosphine discovery on Venus could mean '10-20 percent' chance of life, scientists say
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
MLB playoff rankings: Top eight World Series contenders after trade deadline
Nebraska teen accused of causing train derailment for 'most insane' YouTube video
NYC Mayor Eric Adams defends top advisor accused of sexual harassment
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Simone Biles reveals champion gymnastics team's 'official' nickname: the 'Golden Girls'
Boar’s Head expands recall to include 7 million more pounds of deli meats tied to listeria outbreak
Navajo Nation plans to test limit of tribal law preventing transportation of uranium on its land